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DVC-leader West Chicago halts West Aurora's 3-game streak

West Chicago junior guard Claire Monroe shot the lights out again Thursday at West Aurora, only this time she was able to enjoy it.

Monroe had drained all of her four 3-pointers in the Wildcats' previous game, an effort that came in vain when West Chicago lost the Oswego East tournament championship game to Andrew.

Monroe one-upped herself against the Blackhawks, canning her first five 3-pointers to rally West Chicago from an early 7-point deficit on their way to a 51-39 victory.

Monroe proved human when she finally missed a 3. She finished 5 of 7 from beyond the arc and scored 17 of her game-high 18 points in the first half.

"It's good to see," West Chicago coach Kim Wallner said. "She's added some things to her game. I just think she's getting a little more confident on the floor."

Monroe showed that confidence on her final 3, stealing the ball on one end and pulling up from a couple feet behind the 3-point line in transition.

"I was on kind of a streak, and when you are hot you should take your shots because they are bound to go in," Monroe said.

West Chicago (13-3, 4-0) stayed perfect in the DuPage Valley Conference while snapping West Aurora's three-game winning streak.

The Wildcats, who avenged a loss to West Aurora last year in their first game of the new year, haven't won the DVC since 2001.

"We really think we are capable of winning conference if we keep playing hard," Monroe said. "We really want it this year. We have a good team, and I think we are a good group of girls that play together."

It was West Aurora (3-11, 0-4) playing together early, racing to a 17-15 lead when Alexis Nelson nailed a long 3-pointer to end the first quarter seconds after Monroe's 3-pointer had given West Chicago its first lead at 15-14.

The Wildcats only allowed 22 points over the final three quarters. They took the lead for good midway through the second quarter on Mary Connolly's layup.

"We didn't come out ready to defend," Wallner said. "I thought we engaged much more inside, we didn't allow quite as much penetration. I thought we cleaned up our defense as the game went on."

After Monroe carried the offense in building a 30-24 halftime lead, her teammates got going in the second half. Connolly finished with 10 points, Allie Tapanes 8 and Kelsey Myers 7.

Wallner complimented the bench even while the team played short-handed without top reserve Jordan Nickelson (ill).

"It seems like whenever someone keys on one person someone else steps up," Monroe said. "Everyone can score."

West Chicago led 38-29 after three quarters and was up by double figures almost the entire fourth quarter. The Blackhawks, after sinking 8 of 17 shots in the first quarter, made just 8 of 34 the rest of the night. They also went 5 of 12 at the free-throw line.

"We played really strong and followed the game plan and all of a sudden it kind of went haywire," West Aurora coach Connie Siljendahl said. "We couldn't stop (Monroe), she's such a great player. Just got herself open so quick."

Many of those misses came from point-blank range. The young Blackhawks start a pair of freshmen and only had one senior score.

"That's the easiest shot in the world," Siljendahl said of the missed lay-ins. "You hear footsteps and panic. That comes from inexperience. Three, four freshmen on the floor, they hear steps."

Freshman Liz Skaggs led West Aurora with 13 points and 13 rebounds. Nelson added 11 points, and Royalle Brown had 9 points and 7 rebounds.

West Chicago finishes the first half of DVC play against Wheaton Warrenville South on Saturday and the two Napervilles next week.

"We're excited, but we're not going to look too far ahead," Wallner said. "We're not going to think that way. It's a marathon. You have to keep building confidence and working."

Batavia 68, Elgin 10: The Bulldogs improved to 5-12, 3-2 in the Upstate Eight River by handing Elgin its 16th straight loss Thursday in Batavia.

The Bulldogs led 18-3 after the first quarter and 34-8 at halftime. Freshman Erin Bayram led the way with 13 points, Miranda Grizaffi had 10, Tamar Norville scored 9 and Katie Baglieri and Heather Anderson 8.

Boys basketball

Burlington 69, North Boone 62 (OT): As soon as North Boone's Austin Baden missed a potential game-winning 3-pointer, Burlington Central finally felt comfortable.

After battling deficits as large as 15 points in the third quarter, the Rockets clawed their way back to a 60-60 tie in the closing seconds at North Boone. After Baden missed a 3-pointer as time expired, the Rockets went on to outscore the Vikings 9-2 in overtime to seal a 69-62 Big Northern Conference East boys basketball victory in Popla Grove Thursday night.

"We just never gave up," Central coach Brad Porto said. "The team believed that it was our game. When you come up here it's a tough environment to play in."

Jarod Moxness nailed a 3-pointer off a pass from Ray Hunnicutt with 10 seconds left to tie the game at 60.

Central (9-5, 4-0) did not lead the game from the opening minute of the second period until Tim Sullivan nailed a 3-pointer with 2:59 left in overtime to put Central ahead 63-60. The Rockets' previous lead came when Hunnicutt put the Rockets ahead 13-11 on the opening possession of the second quarter.

Kyle Garman (18 points) brought North Boone (5-6, 2-1) back within 63-62 when he drew Sam Klein's fifth foul with 1:43 left in overtime. The Vikings would not score again missing all 6 shot attempts and Garman missed another pair of free throws.

Hunnicutt, who led all players with 28 points, made all 4 of his free-throw attempts in the overtime period.

"We had the will to win," said Klein, who finished with 15 points, 14 rebounds, 3 assists and 2 steals. "(After Baden missed his shot) it was a relief. We had a fresh start."

Central, which won its fourth straight, needed a fresh start after struggling on both ends of the floor for the majority of the game.

The Vikings broke an 11-11 tie at the end of the first quarter by outscoring Central 20-7 in the second period. Central shot 21.8 percent (7 of 32) from the floor in the first half. The Rockets followed the effort up by going 42.8 percent (15 of 35) in the second half.

After Sullivan connected on a pair of 3-pointers in the first quarter, Central would miss its next 16 long-range shots until Hunnicutt cut North Boone's lead to 47-41 with 6:36 left in the fourth period.

"The first 16 minutes of the game was poor," Porto said. "Our defensive intensity was night and day between the two halves. We kind of slept walked through the first half."

One thing that remained consistent for the Rockets was their rebounding. Central was able to, in part, make up for some of its poor shooting with a 50-28 advantage on the glass. The Rockets grabbed a whopping 24 offensive rebounds. Along with Klein, Hunnicutt (10) and Thomas Fitzgerald (11) all finished with double-digit rebounds.

Tim Huber led the Vikings with 19 points.

Matt Stacionis

West Chicago's Mary Connolly puts up a running one-hander against West Aurora during Thursday's game in Aurora. Rick West | Staff Photographer
West Aurora's Royalle Brown launches a shot over a pair of West Chicago defenders during Thursday's game in Aurora. Rick West | Staff Photographer
West Aurora's Jonica Walker puts up a shot in a crowded lane during Thursday's game against West Chicago in Aurora. Rick West | Staff Photographer
West Chicago's Claire Monroe grabs a rebound in front of West Aurora's Abriya Zeitz during Thursday's game in Aurora. Rick West | Staff Photographer
West Aurora's Dazmine Chaney drives past a pair of West Chicago defenders during Thursday's game in Aurora. Rick West | Staff Photographer
West Aurora freshman Liz Skaggs nabs one of her 13 rebounds Thursday against West Chicago in Aurora. Rick West | Staff Photographer

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